Armed robbers crash SUV into museum, steal gold

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ByVic Lee KGO logo
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Armed robbers crash SUV into museum, steal gold
Armed robbers crash SUV into museum, steal goldAn SUV crashed into the Wells Fargo building on Montgomery Street in San Francisco's Financial District, stealing gold nuggets.

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Thieves crashed a stolen SUV into the Wells Fargo building on Montgomery Street in San Francisco's Financial District.

Three suspects involved wore ski masks, hoodies and blue jeans. The three got out, held a security guard at gunpoint and made off with four to 10 ounces gold nuggets from a display case.

The three then escaped in another car, a white Ford Taurus and were last seen heading eastbound across the Bay Bridge.

The glass doors to the museum that were broken are estimated to be worth $200,000.

This is the fifth robbery since November in the San Francisco in which thieves have used a car as a battering ram.

Among them, a robbery of a Patagonia store in January, when the crooks backed a U-Haul truck through the store and stole pricey goods. In November, thieves crashed their car into a Chanel boutique and made off with designer handbags. No one has been arrested in those two robberies.

One of the first of these 'crash-and-grabs' occurred two years ago at a Tiffany's jewelry store in Walnut Creek.

The thieves may have thought they got gold rush era nuggets may be worth a lot, but they are not.

"These nuggets represented Gold Rush era. Our understanding from Wells Fargo is these aren't the actual ones that were obtained at that time," explained SFPD PIO Grace Gatpandan.

"It wasn't the biggest heist. And no, it wasn't an Ocean's Eleven mastermind heist," said Boris Tavrovsky, with Oxbridge Coins.

But jewelers add that they gold nuggets are rare and could be more expensive.

"Because they're used in jewelry and they are unique, so the value could be three to four times the

Value of gold weight," explained Jay Cresalia with Cresalia Jewelry.

That means the gold could be worth up to $50,000.

According to the museum's website, the stagecoaches on display in the museum were used by the company in the 1860s, shortly after the company was founded in 1852, as a banking and mail delivery service for merchants and miners who came West during the Gold Rush.

The museum had a collection of gold nuggets from across the West, with some coming from the Calaveras River and the Mariposa River, among other locales.

Towing the SUV out of the lobby proved to be a delicate task. The tow truck operator spent more than an hour trying to move it while people stopped to watch and take pictures.

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